Europe’s defence spending spree must fund domestic AI, official says - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
战争

Europe’s defence spending spree must fund domestic AI, official says

Henna Virkkunen says 10% of investment should be directed to artificial intelligence and quantum computing developed in EU
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":null,"text":"

Henna Virkkunen: ‘We want to especially boost our European technologies and European defence industry with these actions
"}],[{"start":11.44,"text":"Europe’s surge in defence spending must also fund “disruptive” technologies such as artificial intelligence and quantum computing that can have military applications, the EU’s tech chief has said."}],[{"start":28.03,"text":"Russia’s war against Ukraine and US President Donald Trump’s oscillating support for defending the continent have prompted a historic increase in military expenditure and investment in the arms industry. Some 10 per cent of that funding should be funnelled to nascent technologies developed in the EU, according to the bloc’s technology and security commissioner Henna Virkkunen."}],[{"start":55.56,"text":"“It’s very important for the European Union to be sure that . . . our defence industry is competitive in the future,” she told the Financial Times. “We want to now encourage the member states to invest a bigger part, 10 per cent, to these disruptive technologies.”"}],[{"start":75.6,"text":"Under a defence industry “road map” to be put forward by the European Commission on Wednesday, defence procurement rules are set to be upgraded next year to make it faster and easier for smaller companies to win contracts and favour more European companies."}],[{"start":94.69999999999999,"text":"“We want to especially boost our European technologies and European defence industry with these actions,” Virkkunen said. “It’s very important to look at the security aspect nowadays and that’s why we have to of course look from where we are buying different products.”"}],[{"start":113.85,"text":"Borrowing from Ukraine’s wartime experience where small-scale manufacturers have developed critical weapons systems such as drones used by the country’s armed forces, Brussels seeks to link deep-tech start-ups with traditional arms manufacturers, Virkkunen said. This would allow ideas to flow from labs and innovators faster into procurement pipelines, she argued."}],[{"start":141.82999999999998,"text":"The initiative is part of a number of new EU proposals aimed at making the bloc more competitive on the global stage and reducing its reliance on products developed in the US and China. The EU has also sought to spur the creation of an “AI continent” after falling behind Beijing and Washington in the rollout of generative AI and robotics."}],[{"start":169.26,"text":"Virkkunen said that since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, more than 230 defence start-ups have been created in the EU. To help them scale up, the commission will launch a €1bn “fund of funds”, backed by the European Investment Bank, she said. Finding sources of capital is one of the key hurdles for defence innovators."}],[{"start":196.35,"text":"Virkkunen said Ukraine’s battlefield had become “a test bed for new technologies”, offering lessons for the EU on how to accelerate innovation cycles. Brussels is already co-operating with Kyiv on defence tech."}],[{"start":213.38,"text":"Others, however, have sounded a note of caution, pushing back at the notion that too much money was being poured into conventional systems."}],[{"start":223.72,"text":"One of Germany’s top procurement officials, vice admiral Carsten Stawitzki, warned on Tuesday that Ukraine was “not a blueprint” for European rearmament."}],[{"start":235.5,"text":"Ukraine had been forced to produce millions of drones, he told the Berlin Security Conference, being held 18-19 November, as a “workaround” because it was lacking the capabilities western armies have."}],[{"start":251.1,"text":"While he stressed he was “not a dinosaur” and supported the adoption of innovative technologies, Stawitzki said that in the short term Germany was prioritising capabilities such as a shared nuclear deterrent, fighter jets and long-range missiles capable of striking deep into enemy territory — weapons that “our Ukrainian friends unfortunately don’t have”."}],[{"start":278.95,"text":"Additional reporting by Laura Pitel in Berlin"}],[{"start":291.57,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1763595687_7180.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

中国运动服装热潮令海外品牌步伐轻快

Rapha与露露乐蒙等品牌正搭乘健康养生热潮。

永远只有一位特朗普总统

他刻意缺席儿子的婚礼,似乎就是要让小唐纳德•特朗普明白自己的位置。

逾半“影子船队”油轮存在引发环境灾难的风险

领先的船舶拆解企业表示,已受制裁的老旧船舶应予报废拆解。

山德士警告:廉价中国进口药品威胁欧洲抗生素供应

首席执行官表示:若缺乏更有力的保护措施,欧洲大陆面临失去关键药品生产能力的风险。

中国在摩洛哥打造工业基地令欧盟不安

数十亿美元的投资引发担忧:享受补贴的商品可能会冲击并挤垮欧洲制造商。

稀土争夺战引发对环境破坏的担忧

试图扩大西方供应的公司正面临法律和社区层面的阻碍。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×